Katie Price is great, say Cambridge University students

Katie Price stunned the undergraduates with a string of arguments about feminism.

Katie follows in the footsteps of former US President Ronald Reagan, wartime PM Winston Churchill and Hollywood legend Clint Eastwood, 81, to debate at the union.

The glamour girl stunned the undergraduates with a string of arguments about feminism.

And she made her points so well that she won the Cambridge University debate with a whopping 92% of the students’ vote.

The big-mouthed model had been invited to lead a team opposing the motion: “The only limit to female success is female ambition.”

Katie, alias Jordan, seemed to be re-gretting taking part as she looked nervous, fluffed her lines and swore during her 10-minute speech to the historic Cambridge Union.

But when Katie argued women could have a career and children, 497 audience members backed her views as the opposition, who included brainy Rachel Johnson – sister of London Mayor Boris, 47 – got only 39 votes.

Katie, 33, admitted she had not been particularly bright at school and would always lose a game of Trivial Pursuit.

She told students: “There is no excuse for being lazy and there is no such thing as can’t.”

She added: “I do my job not because I have to but because I love it.”

But she clashed with Rachel, editor of toffs’ magazine The Lady, during the debate. The 46-year-old sniped: “The sky is the limit or in your case a 10-part series on Sky called Katie.”

She then added sarcastically: “Katie Price’s novels are for real lovers of literature.” And she even sniffily Tweeted: “We are getting on like a proverbial house on fire, cough.”

But the students backed Katie. First- year Helen Charman, 18, said: “She was very impressive and more inspirational than the opposition and her argument was full of common sense.

“Whatever you think about the way she has made her money, you can’t fault the fact she has succeeded in what is a very masculine world.”

Katie follows in the footsteps of former US President Ronald Reagan, wartime PM Winston Churchill and Hollywood legend Clint Eastwood, 81, to debate at the union.

Other speakers due this term are US chat show host Jerry Springer, 67, ex-Foreign Secretary David Miliband, 46, and ex-Northern Ireland politician the Rev Ian Paisley, 85.